PC Music bannerPC Music

PC Music is taking over Dazed

Across a two-day-long guest edit, we’ve got an in-depth oral history of the label, profiles, exclusive mixes, and more

Welcome to Dazed’s PC Music Takeover, a guest edit celebrating 10 years of pop music’s most influential label. Over the next two days, we will be publishing an oral history, based on extensive interviews with the producers and collaborators involved; profiles with some of the label’s major talent; an interview with graphic designer Timothy Luke about its visual identity; an exclusive mix by DJ Warlord, and more.  

Since its founding in 2013, PC Music has launched the careers of mainstays like A.G. Cook, Danny L Harle and Hannah Diamond; nurtured long-running and fruitful collaborations with Caroline Polachek, Charli XCX, SOPHIE and countless others, and created a sound which has defined the last decade. Earlier this year, the label announced it will no longer be releasing new music, but its legacy is assured, its impact on culture seismic and enduring.

Join us here to celebrate one of the most exhilarating runs a record label has ever had. 

Read Next
FeatureUnpicking the dark lore behind Ethel Cain’s new album

The Ethel Cain cinematic universe expands with her latest album Willoughby Tucker, I’ll Always Love You. Here, we unpick five narrative highlights from the release

Read Now

On the RiseEffie is South Korea’s first hyperpop hero

Birthing South Korea’s first Sad Girl movement, the singer-rapper’s debut album E is a profound disruption of the Korean musical status quo

Read Now

The Autumn 2025 IssueLorde: ‘This is me: all the gore and all the fuck-ups’

Lorde’s arrival on the scene as an otherworldly teenager was a major reset for pop. Now, ten years after her first Dazed cover, she’s arrived in her ‘id era’, exploring sex, drugs and her gender identity with wild abandon

Read Now

Art & PhotographyWin pre-launch tickets to Paradigm Shift at 180 Studios

Be the first to experience the landmark exhibition where artists from Andy Warhol to Nan Goldin reinvent the moving image as a stage for style, identity and rebellion

Read Now